One Stop Shop For Teachers
“The Land of Snakes and Donuts”
Purpose: This lesson is designed as a starting point for students to actually practice some of the basic concepts found in economics. There are literally hundreds of variations of this activity that can be used to teach almost any elementary economic lesson.
Materials: This can be varied as well, but essentially, you will need:
- Play-Doh or some molding clay or something students can use to “make” something.
- Fake money or something that can be used as money
- Pens, markers, pencils (UNSHARPENED), paper
- Some variations on the lesson may require other materials
Basic Lesson: This is a progressive lesson in economics. It starts very basic and each step introduces a new, more complex component of economics. The teacher may introduce variations at each step to emphasize certain points with the students. Ultimately this activity is designed to give students an interactive example that they can use to apply these concepts to real, practical situations later on (particularly in 4th and 5th grades). It is not necessary to complete every step of this activity in one session. In reality, it may be more effective to complete one step, discuss it and talk about real life examples prior to engaging in the next step.
STEP / ACTIVITY / APPLICABLE STANDARDS / CONCEPTS1 / Students, in groups are given one can of play-doh. They are told that this play-doh represents a natural resource (or in early grades “something to make things with”). Can discuss resources if desired at this point. Students are told that they are in a group (country, city, etc) that needs two goods: snakes and donuts. They are responsible for making these goods. The teacher should demonstrate how to make each good if necessary. The snakes are long, skinny pieces that are rolled out to be the length of an unsharpened pencil. Anything shorter than a pencil is not useful. To make donuts, you connect the two ends of the snake. To be useful, the donut must be big enough to go around the Play-doh canister. / KE3a
3E1a-d / *Resources
2 / Now give the students 15 seconds (recommended, but vary time as needed) to make as many snakes as they can. Repeat this several times so students get the hang of making the snakes, starting over every time. Then give them the same amount of time to make as many donuts as they can and repeat several rounds. Then give the SAME amount of time and ask students to make BOTH snakes and donuts. They will probably make less as they divide their resources. Discuss with the students why they weren’t able to make as much when they had to make both things. If they were able to make the same amount, they were likely smaller OR they had previously had left over resources and now they are using all of their resources. Also discuss how the members of the group are getting better at making goods and if some people are better at certain things than others.
***There is a potential math connection here. Students can graph their production at different points either on a bar graph or linear graph. / KE1(work in general), KE2, KE4
1E1, 1E2,
2E1
4E1a
5E1a / *Specialization
*Scarcity/ Opportunity Cost
3 / Now you are going to have students make the snakes and donuts, but pay them (fake money or candy). The rate of pay should be decided by the teacher (per item, by amount of time…). Vary the rate of pay to offer incentives. For example, during one round, pay more for snakes than donuts and let students decide how they want to divide their resources, knowing that they have to have both goods. Can pay by student or by group to emphasize various points. Do not let students do anything with their money yet. / KE1, KE2
1E1, 1E3
2E2
4E1b
5E1b / *Incentives
*Scarcity
4 / Now announce that as the groups have progressed, they want snakes and donuts of different colors. Discuss with students how, if they only have one color, how they will get other colors. (This is a great opportunity to teach the 2nd grade standard about allocation of goods!) They may decide to trade evenly. Discuss some drawbacks to this (different sizes/quality, what if some groups don’t have enough to trade or don’t want certain colors, etc). They may decide to use money to buy snakes and donuts. If they do this, let the students see if they can work out a price on their own. Have students describe why money is better than barter. Discuss why the price ended up there. Depending on the math level of the students, you may discuss averages or mean, median, mode with students here. The other major discussion point here is about why trade and voluntary exchange is necessary. They should see that with trade, people were able to get more colors and allowing it to happen voluntarily meant that people could decide for themselves what they wanted to buy and sell for. / KE2
1E3
2E2, 2E3
3E3a-d
4E1b-e
5E1b-e
5E3a,b / *Trade
*Scarcity
*Incentives
*Interdependency
*Role of Money
5 / By now students should all have some money of their own. If they don’t, encourage them to make some more snakes/donuts to earn some money. Ask them, based on the current price of snakes and donuts, how many they would be able to buy. What happens if they buy too many donuts? At this point students can start to create a budget, if appropriate, but all students should be able to discuss the pros and cons of their decision. / KE3b, KE4
1E3, 1E4
2E1, 2E3, 2E4
3E4
4E2
5E4 / *Role of money
*Scarcity
At this point, most of the major concepts in the elementary economics curriculum have been at least introduced and applied in a fictional setting. There are literally hundreds of variations to do for this activity. For example, the teacher may take on the role of government and collect taxes from the students in exchange for providing new cans of play-doh for each round or some other service (3E2, 5E2c). Another variation would be to see what happens to production when a new piece of technology is introduced (like a large block to flatten the play-do, then a pencil could be used to make strips for the snakes) (4E1f, 5E1f). Ultimately, the more students DO with this information, the better they will be able to apply it to real situations later.
Land of Snakes and Donuts Info
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Land of Snakes and Donuts Info
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Georgia Department of Education
Kathy Cox, State Superintendent of Schools
SOCIAL STUDIES K-5 Economics Lesson
UPDATED 12/05/2007 Page 5 of 5
Copyright 2007 © All Rights Reserved